Various Artists: Bonking Berlin Bastards - OSTVarious Artists: Bonking Berlin Bastards - OSTVarious Artists: Bonking Berlin Bastards - OSTVarious Artists: Bonking Berlin Bastards - OST
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Various Artists: Bonking Berlin Bastards - OST

Early 00s Techno / Electro / Post-Punk & Industrial 'underground punk porn' soundtrack (w/ download code)

"First released by Cazzo Film in 2001, ebo hill’s Bonking Berlin Bastards has long achieved the status of an underground punk porn classic. Like the Cazzo productions of director Bruce LaBruce, hill’s vision was both ahead of its time and a playful distillation of 90s and early-2000s Berlin Zeitgeist: queer, industrial, hypersexual, exhibitionist and fueled by electronic music. The story is told in large part by the soundtrack, to be released for the first time on A-TON.

The music follows a group of squatters, punks and drag queens as they fuck, party and stumble their way through an empty city at the turn of the millennium. Approaching these themes more through location than plot, the film’s narrative freedom is also a narrative of freedom; between chance encounters and sex in public, atop the maze of roofs in the city’s former East, bent over bridges and moaning in ecstasy at oncoming traffic, pants down in telephone booths, packed into sex clubs, in the shadows of abandoned factories and techno clubs lost in time.

Composed by improvisational techno trio AeoX and noise / industrial producer Rouage aka CNM (respectively), the music spans a broad range of appropriately pounding industrial, weird techno, noise, ultra-stoned ambient, improvised dub and electro. It’s a sonic spectrum that connects Berlin’s queer hardcore techno and squatter party scenes from which AeoX and Rouage emerged, drawing a direct line between the likes of Berghain-forerunner OstGut (a primary meeting point for the film’s cast & crew) to the more industrial, breakcore and noise- oriented independent party collectives and locations who provided multiple settings for the film, including Grüne Hölle and Stellwerk."

Various Artists: Bonking Berlin Bastards - OST

Various Artists: Bonking Berlin Bastards

Early 00s Techno / Electro / Post-Punk & Industrial 'underground punk porn' soundtrack

VA: I Remember All My Lovers0:17AIFF € 1.25MP3 € 1.00
Aeox: Gruft1:23AIFF € 1.25MP3 € 1.00
Rouage: Rush Hour4:38AIFF € 1.75MP3 € 1.25
Aeox: Fragile3:51AIFF € 1.75MP3 € 1.25
Aeox: Kesseltreiben7:56AIFF € 1.75MP3 € 1.25
Aeox: Bekifft1:05AIFF € 1.25MP3 € 1.00
VA: Dreierlei Fickblick2:06AIFF € 1.25MP3 € 1.00
CNM: Deform (RMX)3:37AIFF € 1.75MP3 € 1.25
Aeox: Guitarmad2:45AIFF € 1.25MP3 € 1.00
Aeox: Culture Houze5:30AIFF € 1.75MP3 € 1.25
Rouage: Fierce4:05AIFF € 1.75MP3 € 1.25
Aeox: Ficken1:38AIFF € 1.25MP3 € 1.00
Rouage: Touch It (Stellwerk RMX)3:41AIFF € 1.75MP3 € 1.25
Aeox: Denksport6:18AIFF € 1.75MP3 € 1.25
Rouage: Syrinx (in Öl)3:16AIFF € 1.75MP3 € 1.25
Rouage: Deform3:44AIFF € 1.75MP3 € 1.25

"First released by Cazzo Film in 2001, ebo hill’s Bonking Berlin Bastards has long achieved the status of an underground punk porn classic. Like the Cazzo productions of director Bruce LaBruce, hill’s vision was both ahead of its time and a playful distillation of 90s and early-2000s Berlin Zeitgeist: queer, industrial, hypersexual, exhibitionist and fueled by electronic music. The story is told in large part by the soundtrack, to be released for the first time on A-TON.

The music follows a group of squatters, punks and drag queens as they fuck, party and stumble their way through an empty city at the turn of the millennium. Approaching these themes more through location than plot, the film’s narrative freedom is also a narrative of freedom; between chance encounters and sex in public, atop the maze of roofs in the city’s former East, bent over bridges and moaning in ecstasy at oncoming traffic, pants down in telephone booths, packed into sex clubs, in the shadows of abandoned factories and techno clubs lost in time.

Composed by improvisational techno trio AeoX and noise / industrial producer Rouage aka CNM (respectively), the music spans a broad range of appropriately pounding industrial, weird techno, noise, ultra-stoned ambient, improvised dub and electro. It’s a sonic spectrum that connects Berlin’s queer hardcore techno and squatter party scenes from which AeoX and Rouage emerged, drawing a direct line between the likes of Berghain-forerunner OstGut (a primary meeting point for the film’s cast & crew) to the more industrial, breakcore and noise- oriented independent party collectives and locations who provided multiple settings for the film, including Grüne Hölle and Stellwerk."